In Alabama, a church sees its Latino brethren vanish:  Since the state passed its tough immigration law, many are moving elsewhere. At one Southern Baptist church, white members struggle to reconcile their support for the measure with compassion for their fellow Christians.

In an hour, the sanctuary would fill with the church’s white members, nearly all of them conservatives and most supporters of Republican Gov. Robert J. Bentley, the Southern Baptist deacon who championed the law as the nation’s toughest after signing it in September.
For more than a decade, however, the white Southern Baptists in this small country church have opened their doors, wallets and hearts to a group of Latino strangers who appeared among them suddenly one Sunday, desperate for a place to pray.
They hired a bilingual pastor, launched a countywide “Hispanic mission,” and let their children play side by side with the newcomers’ kids on field trips and in summer camps. They knew or suspected that many of them were here illegally.

This is fascinating.
Photo: Pastor Randy Billingsley sits with children for a short story as part of the English service at Riverside Heights Baptist Church in Tallassee, Ala. Latino families attend a Spanish-language service in another room. Credit: Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times

In Alabama, a church sees its Latino brethren vanish: Since the state passed its tough immigration law, many are moving elsewhere. At one Southern Baptist church, white members struggle to reconcile their support for the measure with compassion for their fellow Christians.

In an hour, the sanctuary would fill with the church’s white members, nearly all of them conservatives and most supporters of Republican Gov. Robert J. Bentley, the Southern Baptist deacon who championed the law as the nation’s toughest after signing it in September.

For more than a decade, however, the white Southern Baptists in this small country church have opened their doors, wallets and hearts to a group of Latino strangers who appeared among them suddenly one Sunday, desperate for a place to pray.

They hired a bilingual pastor, launched a countywide “Hispanic mission,” and let their children play side by side with the newcomers’ kids on field trips and in summer camps. They knew or suspected that many of them were here illegally.

This is fascinating.

Photo: Pastor Randy Billingsley sits with children for a short story as part of the English service at Riverside Heights Baptist Church in Tallassee, Ala. Latino families attend a Spanish-language service in another room. Credit: Don Bartletti / Los Angeles Times

  1. iamrazz reblogged this from cyberterrorist
  2. dannielas11 reblogged this from jmindbeats
  3. jmindbeats reblogged this from lati-negros
  4. cyberterrorist reblogged this from lati-negros
  5. lati-negros reblogged this from anindiscriminatecollection
  6. anindiscriminatecollection reblogged this from lavvocato
  7. grandeurdelusion reblogged this from npr
  8. theunseen reblogged this from npr and added:
    Christ wouldn’t have thrown the immigrants under the bus…
  9. fantasticness reblogged this from npr
  10. cesarig reblogged this from npr
  11. canwecallitmagic reblogged this from npr
  12. makibakamoments reblogged this from npr
  13. thatismighty reblogged this from npr
  14. ollyaitch reblogged this from npr
  15. mightymaura reblogged this from npr
  16. kendrabrown reblogged this from npr
  17. laughlikea reblogged this from npr
  18. jjuar reblogged this from latimes
  19. loveleenbee reblogged this from npr
  20. l2the5th reblogged this from npr and added:
    …and folks wanna know why I complain about living in AL almost every other day. Thank GOD Birmingham is an urban...
  21. mister--smith reblogged this from npr and added:
    My state is so goddamn backwards. They pull over any brown person they see. They don’t give two fucks about catching an...
  22. thisisjamesj reblogged this from latimes
  23. temporarily reblogged this from hidama